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Carmel Country Club Selected To Host
2006 U.S. Girls' Junior Championship


June
3, 2004
E-mail address: mediarelations@usga.org
Far Hills, N.J. - Carmel Country Club in Charlotte, N.C., (www.carmelcountryclub.org)
has been selected by the United States Golf Association as the host
for the 2006 U.S. Girls' Junior Championship. The championship will
be played July 17-22.
Carmel Country Club is a 36-hole facility which was founded in 1947.
The South Course, where the championship will be contested, was
designed by Ellis Maples and opened in 1969. In 1988, Rees Jones
made revisions to the South Course, which is well bunkered and features
narrow fairways.
"We are delighted to be chosen
to host the 58th U.S. Girls' Junior Championship,"
said general chairman Dave Cathcart. "Carmel Country Club has
a long history of supporting junior golf and having this championship
on our South Course is testimony to that commitment."
Carmel Country Club, which is hosting its first USGA championship,
has been the host site of the 2001 North Carolina Women's Amateur,
the 2004 Carolina Senior Women's Amateur as well as serving as the
qualifying site for the Kemper Open in the 1970s. In addition, the
2005 Atlantic Coast Conference Women's Championship will be conducted
at Carmel Country Club.
The U.S. Girls' Junior is open to female golfers, 17 and under,
who have a USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 18.4. Among the notable
winners are: Mickey Wright (winner of four U.S. Women's Opens),
JoAnne Gunderson Carner (winner of eight USGA titles), U.S. Women's
Open winners Amy Alcott and Hollis Stacy, LPGA Hall of Famer Nancy
Lopez and LPGA rookie Aree Song.
Prior to 2006, the U.S. Girls' Junior will be played at Mira Vista
Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, from July 19-24, 2004 and Banbury
Golf Club in Eagle, Idaho, from July 18-23, 2005.
The USGA conducts 13 national championships each year, including
the U.S. Open and the U.S. Women's Open. Ten of these championships
are strictly for amateurs. Visit www.usga.org/championships for more information.
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